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Hazelnut Grove - nitrogen fixers & economics?

 
pollinator
Posts: 133
Location: Southern Gulf islands, BC, Canada
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Hello!

Our property (zone 8, BC Canada) has a small hazelnut grove (7 mature trees, however one is currently inaccessible due to a brutal blackberry wall). We have plans to expand it with at least 4 more trees that are waiting in our little backyard nursery in town. I have a couple questions for other hazelnut growers:

1. What plants do you grow to support your hazelnuts? I am currently thinking of clover but other low growing shade tolerant nitrogen fixers are also of interest. I'd also love to hear of any plants that people are using to out-compete blackberry as they are encroaching on 3/4 sides. We do have some vague long-term goat plans but I would have to supervise them heavily around the hazels.

2. Are you able to sell your hazelnuts as a viable crop? We have access to a small farmers market and a tourism and hospitality industry. Our area has lots of people and restaurants who are interested in local food. I would be happy to do value added products - hazelnut butters, misos, flours etc. Our conservative estimate is 100lbs of nuts per year, hopefully doubling that in 4-5 years with proper care and introduction of new trees. What process do you use for large scale shelling?

Thanks in advance permies!
IMG_20230522_081818.jpg
corylus hazel nut picking commercial sale nitrogen fixer
 
Posts: 33
Location: Nova Scotia, Zone 5B, on the Bay of Fundy
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Best of luck with the hazelnuts! What variety are you planning to add and what varieties are already established? Very interested in pollination / crop choices in North America.

Is there any way to plant more trees or bush-types leapfrogging over the encroaching raspberries? More shade at a scale resonant with the hazelnuts would help with the attack plan I imagine..
 
pollinator
Posts: 926
Location: Huntsville Alabama (North Alabama), Zone 7B
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Rutgers University has recently put out some new Hazelnut varieties that have very high resistance to Eastern Filbert Blight.  This link provides a lot of information on how to determine if two varieties are compatible.
https://njaes.rutgers.edu/e368/
 
C Murphy
pollinator
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Location: Southern Gulf islands, BC, Canada
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Dennis Bangham wrote:Rutgers University has recently put out some new Hazelnut varieties that have very high resistance to Eastern Filbert Blight.  This link provides a lot of information on how to determine if two varieties are compatible.
https://njaes.rutgers.edu/e368/



I actually believe that two of my varieties that are waiting in my nursery are from Rutgers. I bought them from a local nut tree nursery who are doing amazing work! They're called Nutcase Nursery in case any other BC folks are looking.
 
C Murphy
pollinator
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Location: Southern Gulf islands, BC, Canada
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Ian Fairweather wrote:Best of luck with the hazelnuts! What variety are you planning to add and what varieties are already established? Very interested in pollination / crop choices in North America.

Is there any way to plant more trees or bush-types leapfrogging over the encroaching raspberries? More shade at a scale resonant with the hazelnuts would help with the attack plan I imagine..



Thank you! I'm not sure about the varieties - the existing ones were planted by previous owners. I have a couple trees from a local nursery and then a couple that are just seedlings someone traded me for some spare TPS seedlings.

I was actually thinking that a line of pawpaws between the hazelnuts and blackberries may work - they'll accept the initial shade and hopefully proceed to shade out the blackberries. I saw someone use them to out-compete broom once and the idea stuck with me.
 
C Murphy
pollinator
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Location: Southern Gulf islands, BC, Canada
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Update: well, the hazelnuts suffered when we had a really bad tent caterpillar year. And now that the nuts are here, we're finding that the squirrels are chewing on the half-formed nuts and throwing them on the ground. I suspect we will have a tiny harvest if any at all. The tent caterpillars are on a cycle so I'm not worried about them, but the squirrels may become a issue!
 
pollinator
Posts: 3827
Location: Massachusetts, Zone:6/7 AHS:4 GDD:3000 Rainfall:48in even Soil:SandyLoam pH6 Flat
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Try and get a breeding pair of bluejay on your property mines are very good at chasing away cats, squirell, the other birds and in return I have given them my elderberry tree. Those birds work hard and deserve their some payment, and I hardly bother to take the time to process the elderberry so its a win-win for me and the birds. Actually while they are raising their young in the spring they eat alot of the pest insect in my garden.

I have also liked the idea of dutch clover, daikon radish, garlic chives and mint as a solid ground cover.
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